Sylvan Esso

Sylvan Esso began as two people who couldn’t sit still. In 2013, the singing songwriter Amelia Meath and the performing producer Nick Sanborn were in North Carolina, working with bands that didn’t enjoy touring. Luckily for them, they found each other. But Meath and Sanborn share more than wanderlust. Theirs is a common musical sensibility that leans toward tender folk harmonies passing though an electronic soundscape. The hard-working duo has released two well-received albums, an EP and a variety of singles. See? They still can’t sit still. But the work is paying off in a spectacular way. Sylvan Esso has a growing audience on television, online and at concerts worldwide. They’re in motion — devotedly and relentlessly so. Over the past year, they’ve played New Orleans three times.

Now about that name…

Video gamers already may recognize “Sylvan” as a wood sprite who roams a musical forest in the popular Superbrothers game, Sword and Sworcery. Sanborn also says he and Meath were inspired by characters from the Lev Grossman book series called The Magicians. Wandering mythical creatures inform much of the duo’s creative aesthetic — adding an otherworldly quality to their music. But Meath says the most compelling reason why there’s an “Esso” in “Sylvan Esso” is that the words flow so well when spoken together. Like a secret password to an enchanted kingdom, the name smacks of magic and mystery. Sylvan Esso’s songs, meanwhile, seem like something more than words put to music. They’re moody and atmospheric soundscapes in which the listener is the sylvan — roaming unspoiled terrain.

Sylvan Esso’s first release was “Play it Right,” a song Meath wrote and sang originally with the harmonic trio Mountain Man. Of all the producers who tackled the song, Sanborn made the remix she liked best.

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Swords, Sworcery and Songs

It seems fitting that the name Sylvan Esso is inspired by a video game. Both Amelia Meath and Nick Sanborn are savvy gamers and love not only playing Sword & Sworcery, but also listening to its musical score. Sword & Sworcery made its debut in 2011 and Canadian composer Jim Guthrie has since released the soundtrack on LP and CD.

Video game music and Sylvan Esso’s discography suggest an infinite palette of sounds available in electronica. Songs can be at times sparse or soaring, ethereal or visceral, gently harmonic or downright jarring. Sanborn, 35, grew up when 8-bit consoles were common family rooms nationwide. Now he’s maestro to an even more elaborate synthetic orchestra. And as he’s been inspired, so have others. The classical music world has become increasingly interested in performing video game soundtracks. It’s not unusual to hear the musical scores of the Legend of Zelda or even Super Mario Brothers performed in concert by a symphony orchestra.

Here’s the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra playing an original Super Mario Brothers composition, by Mahito Yokota & Koji Kondo:

Parade

Happy accidents happen all the time in interviews, but it was a special treat to be interrupted by the sounds of a street parade outside Marigny Studios. A passing brass band, newlyweds and their friends could not have made a better segue way to Sylvan Esso’s latest release called, Parad(w/m)E:

By the time Fred Rogers retired from producing his long-running PBS series, Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood in 2001, he’d made millions of friends among children and adults. A documentary about his life’s work in the service of kindness is in theaters now. But there’ve been other tributes to him over the years, including a puppet show in Minneapolis for which Sylvan Esso recorded a song. Their version of Rogers’ “There Are Many Ways to Say I Love You,” is one of their rare covers and captures the sweetness of the original. Amelia Meath says the enduring connection that people feel toward Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, suggest that the songs on the show may be more meaningful to adults than they are to children.

“You don’t understand it as much until you are an adult,” she told Gwen. “I think he’s writing songs about preparing people to be citizens of the world.”

Nick Sanborn agreed. “He really is one of the first voices that let me know — before I had the words to say it — that carrying the light of humanity is a choice you have to make. That it isn’t automatic. Those are decisions — and they’re not easy decisions. They’re hard decisions. I think that’s such a complex thing to tell somebody, especially a young person. And for almost every one of these songs, that’s basically the theme.”

Music Inside Out is a weekly radio program that celebrates the music and musicians of Louisiana and explores both their influences and their impact around the world. Host Gwen Thompkins is an enthusiastic believer in great music and you hear that, week after week.

Tune in to Music Inside Out on WWNO 89.9 FM in New Orleans Thursdays at 7:00p and Saturdays at Noon. And you can listen to the shows right here, online, anytime.